โJan-09-2016 08:30 AM
โJan-13-2016 07:09 AM
fj12ryder wrote:Bobbo wrote:I don't think you understand what I'm typing. No failure anywhere, just the way the system is designed to work.fj12ryder wrote:Bobbo wrote:If you lose contact with the sensor you'll have no idea whether you have pressure loss or heat buildup. You can lose contact with the sensor just driving down the road if you have a long unit, and you'll have no idea until the monitor alerts you that you've lost contact. That can take an hour or more. During that hour you can blow a tire or have pressure loss and not know it.
I don't mind waiting an hour to learn the battery has died in my TPMS sensor.
As long as it alarms quickly on pressure loss or heat buildup.
I like my TST but I think this time lag issue should be fixed.
That is 2 failures at the same time. A highly improbable occurrence. I will risk it without losing any sleep.
By the same token, If you have a circuit breaker in your house fail and lock closed, and at the same time have a dead short in the wire, you can have a house fire. Is that a design flaw?
You have too much time on your hands.
If your monitor loses contact with a tire sensor, which is more likely if you have a long trailer, you won't know about it for around an hour. During that hour you will not know if your tire loses air, runs hot, or goes completely flat. The monitor will show the last temperature/pressure that it received, which could be an hour old. That is the way the TST system works.
โJan-12-2016 06:32 AM
Bobbo wrote:I don't think you understand what I'm typing. No failure anywhere, just the way the system is designed to work.fj12ryder wrote:Bobbo wrote:If you lose contact with the sensor you'll have no idea whether you have pressure loss or heat buildup. You can lose contact with the sensor just driving down the road if you have a long unit, and you'll have no idea until the monitor alerts you that you've lost contact. That can take an hour or more. During that hour you can blow a tire or have pressure loss and not know it.
I don't mind waiting an hour to learn the battery has died in my TPMS sensor.
As long as it alarms quickly on pressure loss or heat buildup.
I like my TST but I think this time lag issue should be fixed.
That is 2 failures at the same time. A highly improbable occurrence. I will risk it without losing any sleep.
By the same token, If you have a circuit breaker in your house fail and lock closed, and at the same time have a dead short in the wire, you can have a house fire. Is that a design flaw?
You have too much time on your hands.
โJan-12-2016 05:26 AM
fj12ryder wrote:Bobbo wrote:If you lose contact with the sensor you'll have no idea whether you have pressure loss or heat buildup. You can lose contact with the sensor just driving down the road if you have a long unit, and you'll have no idea until the monitor alerts you that you've lost contact. That can take an hour or more. During that hour you can blow a tire or have pressure loss and not know it.
I don't mind waiting an hour to learn the battery has died in my TPMS sensor.
As long as it alarms quickly on pressure loss or heat buildup.
I like my TST but I think this time lag issue should be fixed.
โJan-11-2016 09:51 PM
fj12ryder wrote:JohnG3 wrote:You're missing a critical issue: the same hour delay occurs when you're driving down the road and the monitor loses contact with one or more of the sensors. It can take an hour or more after the monitor loses contact for it to alert you to this fact.
So it sounds like walking away from the sensors with the monitor in your pocket without turning it off and attributing an hours delay in signaling a warning and attributing it to a design or system flaw instead of operator error.
That's a design or system flaw, not operator error.
โJan-11-2016 07:39 AM
โJan-11-2016 06:42 AM
โJan-11-2016 06:40 AM
Bobbo wrote:If you lose contact with the sensor you'll have no idea whether you have pressure loss or heat buildup. You can lose contact with the sensor just driving down the road if you have a long unit, and you'll have no idea until the monitor alerts you that you've lost contact. That can take an hour or more. During that hour you can blow a tire or have pressure loss and not know it.
I don't mind waiting an hour to learn the battery has died in my TPMS sensor.
As long as it alarms quickly on pressure loss or heat buildup.
โJan-11-2016 05:59 AM
โJan-10-2016 07:22 PM
JohnG3 wrote:You're missing a critical issue: the same hour delay occurs when you're driving down the road and the monitor loses contact with one or more of the sensors. It can take an hour or more after the monitor loses contact for it to alert you to this fact.
So it sounds like walking away from the sensors with the monitor in your pocket without turning it off and attributing an hours delay in signaling a warning and attributing it to a design or system flaw instead of operator error.
โJan-10-2016 06:04 PM
โJan-10-2016 02:26 PM
JohnG3 wrote:
Just read 2oldman's link. Just bought and have not yet installed a TireMinder A1A TPMS. This system has a procedure that allows you to "disconnect" monitoring one set of sensors. The example given is you drop the trailer and take the tow vehicle to town. No alarms until you return and reconnect the trailer sensors. Not sure what happens when one would just walk away from either with the monitor in your pocket. Does the TST system address this issue on their manual?
โJan-10-2016 01:23 PM
โJan-10-2016 12:15 PM
โJan-09-2016 11:07 AM